K.Mandla's blog of Linux experiences

Howto: Use Wordgrinder like a pro

A long time ago, or at least what seems like a long time ago, I used to introduce CLI-based applications in an effort to remind people that there’s nothing to be feared at the console prompt. Real-life issues required that I cut those short, and although I managed to squeeze in a few capsule highlights, I wish I had continued those a little longer.

Well hey, that’s a rather unusual way to start the day. If I didn’t know better, I’d think I was playing nInvaders. And what’s with the munchy teeth-looking lines? ASCII art?

Nope, that’s your cue that you’re up and running. Which is more than you get from some other console-based applications. What you’re looking at there is the top and bottom of your document, or the upper and lower limits of your text, if that’s an easier explanation.

So aside from a terse status bar, a word and page count, you’re not going to get a lot of backtalk from Wordgrinder. Oh my goodness, a program that does what it’s told and doesn’t try to dress it up with lightbox effects and ornate frilly things! Genius!

Interacting with Wordgrinder is a lot easier than some other console-based applications (again think: Oleo), since the bulk of the fun seems to happen at the press of the Esc key.

And here’s more of the beauty of Wordgrinder’s severe simplicity. It’s essentially the same File-Edit-View menu arrangement that plagues the GUI world, following the same drop-down fold-out effect, but arranged to allow for odd terminal sizes, and with little aside from the essential. Open, Save, Import, About, Exit, and so forth.

Cut, Copy, Paste, Delete. Find and replace.

A few font effects. Paragraph styling. Margins and so forth.

Document arrays, in case you have more than one open at a time.

And Navigation, if you need to better control yourself.

One of the things I like about Wordgrinder is that you can re-bind keys to something you’re more used to, or suits you better. And since all the function keys are free of preset bindings, you have an enormous number of options available to you, without stepping on any toes.

Saving files in Wordgrinder allows you to attach several “documents” as a single “set,” and thus keep relevant pages or chapters together, in a particular order. (If this isn’t an appealing thought, you could always just open Wordgrinder sessions separately … since system resources probably aren’t going to be a problem.) Those sets are kind of text files, even though a disclaimer at the top insists they’re not.

Wordgrinder can also import from and export to text and HTML formats, but as far as transcoding your entire six-book fantasy epic from odf, don’t look for it .. yet.

And that’s about it. Printing? No. No printing. Clip art? No. No clip art. Graphs, tables and merge file processing with company address databases with output to report files for printing on envelopes and letterhead? No. No … stuff like that.

So why use it? Why pick Wordgrinder over say, nano, for editing text files? (Don’t talk to me about vi.)

Well, to be honest, you shouldn’t use Wordgrinder for that, because it’s not really meant for that. Yes, you could probably edit your xorg.conf file with Wordgrinder, but that’s kind of like using a paintbrush when you need a typewriter. There’s a tool for every chore, and this one is really for writing.

And that’s where it shines. If you can keep yourself focused and on track you can, in fact, eventually peck out Hamlet, like that proverbial chimpanzee. But as most writers can tell you, distractions are your bane, and Wordgrinder pushes everything to the periphery.

So drag out that Pentium II, put a clean command-line installation of 8.10 on there, install Wordgrinder and disconnect it from the Internet. Then lock yourself in a closet for a week or two and see if you too can …

I’m afraid I don’t have an answer for that; the Ubuntu version has a working backspace key so it’s possible that the yaourt version compiles it differently. This might be your big chance for a bug report. … ;)

Well, to be honest, i use vi…for the fun of it…
Back in the days when i was young i ve created my own text editor…
to feet my needs…ancient stuff… and the best of all i made it with
clipper?!!!!(harbour project now)….nice memories though!!!

BTW, and sorry for the double comment, by vimtutoring yourself I mean using VIM’s integrated tutorial: in Arch, which has the simpler version of VIM installed by default it’s “vitutor” – the VIM package has a lot of unnecessary stuff which I don’t need or use.

My mom and I were both working on documents tonight. I used Wordgrinder, she used Word 2003.
Me: .
Her [calling from downstairs, with frustration]: I’ll tell you what! If I didn’t have to keep dealing with this automatic formatting I’d be done already!